Nokia 808 PureView

Great for events and vacation

Awesome still camera. Awesome video camera. Awesome audio recording. I can't wait to use it to capture the memories that happen everyday. Pentaband 3G. Wifi Hotspot. Complete offline GPS. FM-Radio and Transmitter. It has it all except a good browser. The perfect vacation and travel phone for anyone.

Megapixels aren't all that make a camera, there's a lot more that goes into it. It's funny how the cell phone industry gets caught up on how many megapixels something has. A high megapixel camera with crap for other features will just make very large blurry pictures.

That is true: everything from a large sensor (for a phone) to pixel oversampling contribute to the 808's camera quality.

GSMarena conducted blind tests, pitting the 808 Pureview against top smartphones, and a micro 4/3 camera, and the results were nothing short of incredible. An 8 megapixel shot on this phone is the best for phones (for some time to come), as well as perfect for most [even casual] photographers.

Plus, the 808 Pureview makes phone calls, my point and shoot camera does not ... lol

Jellz said:Megapixels aren't all that make a camera, there's a lot more that goes into it. It's funny how the cell phone industry gets caught up on how many megapixels something has. A high megapixel camera with crap for other features will just make very large blurry pictures.

If you believe I was aruging that the Nokia PureView has a bad camera, you're mistaken. I was merely pointing out that the megapixel count isn't everything with a camera, so when Tofuchong says he bought a 2.1 megapixel camera, that doesn't necessarily mean it was bad.

It's possible it was bad, just like it's possible to make a 41 megapixel camera that's bad.

Looking back at the way things went, their mistake was not jumping on Android. Nokia phones have been great, and more options is better (Symbian works just great for what it is) but the way android took off and left BB and Symbian in the dust, they just couldn't keep up. They do make great phones though, good cameras, and great quality devices.

Tofuchong said:Looking back at the way things went, their mistake was not jumping on Android. Nokia phones have been great, and more options is better (Symbian works just great for what it is) but the way android took off and left BB and Symbian in the dust, they just couldn't keep up. They do make great phones though, good cameras, and great quality devices.

I'm not sure jumping on Android would have been a good idea--maybe in the short term; because long term, people are starting to get fed up with Android's fragmentation.

Yeah, I was pretty upset about that too. The Galaxy 5 that I have came with android 2.1 ( I bought it christmas 2011) and it was upgradable to 2.2, however the version of 2.2 that it gets is very, very different than the 2.2 version my friend has on her Optimus Black, the phones even do / do not support different applications, its really a huge piss-off.

Tofuchong said:Yeah, I was pretty upset about that too. The Galaxy 5 that I have came with android 2.1 ( I bought it christmas 2011) and it was upgradable to 2.2, however the version of 2.2 that it gets is very, very different than the 2.2 version my friend has on her Optimus Black, the phones even do / do not support different applications, its really a huge piss-off.

I hope Virgin Mobile gets one too. I do live in Canada, virgin mobile up here is quite a bit better than it is in the US. Virgin Mobile here has a HSPA +42 & LTE network (in 3 cities), AND it also has EVDO, so you can use pretty much any CDMA or GSM phone in existance. I'm looking forward to the Pure View

Virgin has the best speeds i've ever gotten - I have a Galaxy 5 (Galaxy Euro) which is HSPA 10.1 (3G) but I have gotten speeds at *almost* 10 Mbps in some areas, which was faster than one of my buddies 4G phones he has on Bell.

Regarding Symbian, Nokia said they were working on this tech for 5 years or so, so back in 2007, when Symbian still had some kind of foothold in the market, it was a viable, and well-known-enough OS for them to develop this tech for. I think Symbian was a fine choice for this phone for now.

Quite honestly, when I have a Galaxy S III that has all the cool apps and fancy screen, but can't seem to load emails properly, there's a problem with Android. I can't wait to get my 808

Regarding Symbian, Nokia said they were working on this tech for 5 years or so, so back in 2007, when Symbian still had some kind of foothold in the market, it was a viable, and well-known-enough OS for them to develop this tech for. I think Symbian was a fine choice for this phone for now.

Quite honestly, when I have a Galaxy S III that has all the cool apps and fancy screen, but can't seem to load emails properly, there's a problem with Android. I can't wait to g